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10 million admission films (Number of days)

 

12 days

Roaring Currents

 

22 days

The Thieves

 

25 days

The Avengers: Age of Ultron

 

28 days

Ode to my Father

 

32 days

The Host

Miracle in Cell no.7

 

33 days

The Attorney

 

34 days

Haeundae

 

38 days

Avatar

Masquerade

 

39 days

TaeGukGi: Brotherhood of War

 

46 days

Frozen

 

50 days

Interstellar

 

58 days

Silmido

 

66 days

King and the Clown

Edited by Rsyu
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Sunday Box Office (May 17) 

 

-Admissions (Total adm)  Daily%  Gross  (weekly%)  [sC]    {wk}   <Title>
 
1.   267,886     (799,638)    -7.77%  $2.20M       (--)        [795]  {Wk1} <Mad Max: Fury Road>  
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
2.   267,618     (856,779)    -8.77%  $2.02M       (--)        [765]  {Wk1} <The Chronicles of Evil>  
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
3.   142,177   (10,024,388) -14.1%  $1.05M  (-54.6%)    [643]  {Wk4} <The Avengers: Age of Ultron>   
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 
4.     24,756    (1,422,687)  -9.32%  $196K    (-77.1%)    [352]  {Wk4} <Coin Locker Girl>  
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 

5.     13,467     (273,157)    -4.60%  $92K      (-34.2%)    [210]  {Wk4} <Dino Time> 

---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Total admissions: 778,734
Total Gross: $6,020,377
May Total: $77,651,927

Cumulative gross
The Avengers: Age of Ultron: $78.89 million

 

Current presales (Midnight)

01. 27.4% (15,716) Mad Max: Fury Road
02. 25.3% (14,552) The Treacherous

03. 13.0%   (7,478) The Chronicles of Evil
04.   8.3%   (4,744) The Avengers: Age of Ultron
05.   5.9%   (3,386) Spy

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Sunday Box Office (May 17) 

 

-Admissions (Total adm)  Daily%  Gross  (weekly%)  [sC]    {wk}   <Title>

 

1.   267,886     (799,638)    -7.77%  $2.20M       (--)        [795]  {Wk1} <Mad Max: Fury Road>  

---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

2.   267,618     (856,779)    -8.77%  $2.02M       (--)        [765]  {Wk1} <The Chronicles of Evil>  

---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

3.   142,177   (10,024,388) -14.1%  $1.05M  (-54.6%)    [643]  {Wk4} <The Avengers: Age of Ultron>   

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 

4.     24,756    (1,422,687)  -9.32%  $196K    (-77.1%)    [352]  {Wk4} <Coin Locker Girl>  

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 

5.     13,467     (273,157)    -4.60%  $92K      (-34.2%)    [210]  {Wk4} <Dino Time> 

---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Total admissions: 778,734

Total Gross: $6,020,377

May Total: $77,651,927

Cumulative gross

The Avengers: Age of Ultron: $78.89 million

 

Current presales (Midnight)

01. 27.4% (15,716) Mad Max: Fury Road

02. 25.3% (14,552) The Treacherous

03. 13.0%   (7,478) The Chronicles of Evil

04.   8.3%   (4,744) The Avengers: Age of Ultron

05.   5.9%   (3,386) Spy

 

ok so even with good wom mad max still cant be on top admission  :ph34r:

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Top 10 Most Attended films (2015)

01. 10,024,479 The Avengers: Age of Ultron

02.   6,129,597 Kingsman: The Secret Service

03.   3,872,015 Detective K: Secret of the lost island

04,   3,245,548 Fast & Furious 7

05.   3,043,523 Twenty

06.   3,043,523 Big Hero 6

07.   2,192,481 Gangnam Blues 

08.   1,892,125 Love Forecast 

09.   1,860,935 Taken 3

10.   1,741,736 The Imitation Game

 

Top 10 Most Attended Foreign Releases (2004~)

01. 13,624,328 Avatar (2009)

02. 10,296,101 Frozen (2014)

03. 10,275,509 Interstellar (2014)

04. 10,024,479 The Avengers: Age of Ultron (2015)

05.   9,001,309 Iron Man 3 (2013)

06.   7,784,807 Transformers: Dark of the Moon (2011)

07.   7,575,899 Mission Impossible: Ghost Protocol (2011)

08.   7,505,700 Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen (2009)

09.   7,440,531 Transformers (2007)

10.   7,074,867 The Avengers (2012)

 

Top 10 highest Grossing Films (2004~)

01. $131.84 million Roaring currents (2014)
02. $105.49 million Avatar (2009)
03.   $99.99 million Ode to My Father (2014)
03.   $82.67 million The Thieves (2012)
04.   $81.88 million Miracle in cell no.7 (2013)
05.   $81.83 million Masquerade (2012)
06.   $78.89 million The Avengers: Age of Ultron (2015)
07.   $77.80 million The Attorney (2013)
08.   $76.83 million Frozen (2014)
09.   $74.09 million Interstellar (2014)
10.   $73.99 million King and the clown (2005)
 

10 million admission films (Official Record)

01. 17,611,849 Roaring Currents (2014)

02. 14,256,318 Ode to My Father (2014)

03. 13,624,328 Avatar (2009)

04. 13,019,740 The Host (2006)

05. 12,983,330 The Thieves (2012)

06. 12,811,206 Miracle in Cell no.7 (2013)

07. 12,319,542 Masquerade (2012)

08. 12,302,831 King and the Clown (2005)

09. 11,746,135 Taegukgi: Brotherhood of War (2004)

10. 11,453,338 Haeundae (2009)

11. 11,375,944 The Attorney (2013)

12. 11,081,000 Silmido (2003)

13. 10,296,101 Frozen (2014)

14. 10,275,509 Interstellar (2014)

15. 10,024,479 The Avengers: Age of Ultron (2015)

Edited by Rsyu
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WoM can't do that much the first weekend, It can help sure, but it won't do mericals. And I think about 4M for this movie. Probably to high, but i am hoping for a Kingsman like run.

Kingsman was a true word of mouth behemoth, a multiplier of X11.2 off it's opening 3 day weekend. To get to 4M admissions MM4 will need a multi of approximately half of that which is still a very decent multiplier.

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Weekend box office (May 15-17) gross of top 3 films came out like this:

1. Mad Max: Fury Road - $5.83 million

2. The Chronicles of Evil - $5.50 million

3. The Avengers: Age of Ultron - $2.86 million

Very close fight between The Chronicles of Evil and MM4. MM4 won in gross but TCoE came out ahead in admissions. Running totals look like this:

TCoE: 859,903 adm / $6.4M gross

MM4: 802,004 adm / $6.6M gross

Edited by Rsyu
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a piece about the Korean box office. Very insightful.

 

warning: it's very long!

 

 

 

Film Comment, a specialized American publication, wrote a special with a focus on Korean films ten years ago. This year, a decade after that special was published, they prepared an updated report on the current trends of the Korean film industry. By basing the report on six key words that describe today’s Korean cinema, Film Comment put together six features, four of which we’re pleased to include in this Cannes edition of Korean Cinema Today.

 

The Only Way to Move is Forward
    

A decade in the life of Korean cinema 

 

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It’s been ten years since Chuck Stephens wrote about Korean cinema’s perpetual renaissance, in his introduction to Film Comment’s Nov/Dec 2004 midsection “Korea Prospects: Inside an Asian Cinema Powerhouse.” Since then, the perpetual renaissance not only continued, but reached new levels of growth and success, breaking domestic box-office records, and gaining ever wider international acclaim and recognition for Korean films—both mainstream and independent—and the people who make them. While there were bumps on the road, South Korea’s film industry overcame a complex set of challenges, rapidly globalized its operations, and significantly increased its presence in foreign markets, especially with respect to its long-term strategy for China. And following in the footsteps of their Hong Kong counterparts, Korean directors and actors have started making forays into Hollywood.

  
The Korean film industry didn’t develop in a vacuum. It benefited significantly from the country’s rise as an economic and political power (it’s now among the 20 largest economies in the world) and the proliferation and popularity of Korean exports (both consumerist and cultural), especially in Asia.
  
In many ways mirroring Hollywood, the Korean film conglomerates (CJ EntertainmentShowbox/Mediaplex, and Lotte Entertainment) have come to dominate the domestic market through vertical integration. But faced with the limited size of that market and heavy dependence on theatrical box office, they have also been forced to seek out new revenue streams internationally. With the groundwork set by the popularity of Korean TV dramas in the region, Japan became Korea’s top foreign market, and in 2005 there was a feeding frenzy over film distribution rights, resulting in USD 60 million worth of exports to Japan. The lure of easy money, contingent on the casting of popular stars, upended the economics of Korean film production. But the boom proved short-lived, and soon the interest from Japanese buyers dried up. 

 

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In 2006 there was a change in the screen quota system, which had been in place since 1966 to protect the domestic industry. The South Korean government, under pressure from U.S. trade negotiators, reduced movie theaters’ quotas for Korean films from 30-40 percent down to 20 percent. The protests of local filmmakers went unheard, but 2006 ironically turned out to be a record year for domestic films, which accounted for 64 percent of the market, thanks to the blockbuster performances of BONG Joon-ho’s monster movie/political satire/family film The HostLEE Joon-ik’s period drama King and the Clown, and CHOI Dong-hoon’s gambling movie Tazza: The High Rollers, each of which outperformed Mission: Impossible III.

  
After the highs of 2006, the industry entered a troubled three-year period, with a reduced market share for domestic films, declining foreign sales and the box-office failure of many big-budget productions that emphasized spectacle at the expense of story. The conglomerates carried the industry on their backs over these lean years, but emerged controlling a much larger part of it at the end of the crisis. There’s an obvious downside to this near-monopoly, and in 2014 the two largest theater chains CJ-CGV and Lotte Cinema, operated by CJ Entertainment and Lotte Entertainment respectively, were fined the equivalent of USD 5 million by the country’s Fair Trade Commission for favoring releases by their sister distribution companies.
   
Not everything was bad news in 2007. JEON Do-yeon was crowned Best Actress at Cannes for her turn in LEE Chang-dong’s Secret Sunshine. And far more important than any international recognition, the industry’s first and much needed labor deal was finally signed. The pact between the Federation of Korea Movie Workers’ Union (launched in 2004) and the Korea Film Producers Association covered working hours, overtime pay, mandatory insurance, etc. While this marked a significant step in the right direction for improving the working conditions and alleviating the exploitation of the men and women who are the backbone of the industry, the full implementation of the rules still remains a somewhat distant prospect.

 

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The conglomerates’ domination of the market paradoxically invigorated the independent sector, as 2009 proved to be a banner year for indie films, with 64 low-budget features receiving a theatrical release. These included sleeper hits like LEE Chung-ryoul’s documentary Old PartnerYANG Ik-june’s brutal gangster/domestic-violence drama Breathless, and NOH Young-seok’s black comedy Daytime DrinkingOld Partner, an unassuming look at an 80-yearold farmer and his 40-year-old cow, received a limited release after screening at Sundance, but eventually flourished at Korean multiplexes with a stunning three million total admissions, fueled by word of mouth. From this point on, the number and quality of independent releases rose steadily, introducing a new generation of filmmakers with distinct personal styles and visions (JANG Kun-jaeKIM Kyung-mookLEE Su-jinO MuelPARK Jung-bum and others).

   
At the other end of the spectrum, the undisputed box-office champion of 2009 was JK YOUN’s disaster movie Haeundae (Tidal Wave), which showcased Korea’s homegrown digital effects capabilities. Developing alongside the film industry, Korean effects houses (such as Digital Idea and Mofac Studio) were increasingly being sought to work on foreign feature and TV projects, from Rob Minkoff’s The Forbidden Kingdom (2008) and Jon Favreau’s Iron Man 2 (2010) to the recent Chinese 3-D fantasy The Monkey King and Daniel LEE’s period action filmDragon Blade.
   
In 2013 and 2014 English-language projects from three of Korea’s most prominent filmmakers were released in the U.S.: BONG Joon-ho’s SnowpiercerKIM Jee-woon’s forgettable Arnold Schwarzenegger vehicle The Last Stand, and PARK Chan-wook’s gothic psychological thriller Stoker. However, in Hollywood, cultural, linguistic and working style differences remain an issue for Korean directors, who are used to having a much greater degree of autonomy and control. On the acting side, while the country hasn’t produced a major crossover star comparable to Jackie CHAN, a number of actors have recently become more visible through their work in major Englishlanguage films, including BAE Doo-na in Jupiter Ascending and Cloud Atlas (2012), LEE Byung-hun in Terminator: Genisys and the G.I. Joe franchise, and CHOI Min-shik in Luc Besson’s
Lucy.
   
As KIM Han-min’s Roaring Currents became the most watched film in Korea’s history with an unprecedented 17.6 million tickets sold, the industry hasn’t been resting on its laurels. Looking to the future, it has focused on strengthening ties with China. South Korea benefits from its neighbor’s vast and growing market, where Korean content is popular and in demand, while China benefits from Korea’s technical know-how and creative and marketing expertise. Various deals, acquisitions, joint investments and MOUs have culminated in last year’s signing of a film co-production agreement between the two countries, which allows coproductions to bypass China’s foreign-film import quota.
   
These days, Korean cinema’s mainstream is not as filmmaker-driven as it once was—a price that was paid in order for the industry to mature and get through the rough patch of 2007-2010. However, the studios are still willing to take risks and give new talent a chance, especially when it comes to courting young independent filmmakers such as JANG Cheol-sooJANG HoonJO Sung-hee, and YOON Jong-bin. But one can’t overlook the fact that Korea is among those rare countries with a strong and vibrant national cinema, producing a variety of stories and genres made for adults. While American multiplexes are bombarded with comic-book and young-adult-novel adaptations, and family-friendly CGI animation, Korean cinema offers a wide variety of thrillers, period epics, gangster films, adult dramas and comedies, i.e., a significant number of midrange productions that allow for a degree of creative risk-taking.
   
Technically and stylistically, these films feel familiar and approachable, but the country’s unique cultural and historical experience and the traumas caused by the clash of tradition and modernity over a short period of time have infused Korean cinema with a vitality, relevance and explosive energy that have captured the attention of the world. The same drive, resilience and ambition to catch up with the rest of the world and rebuild the country in the aftermath of the Korean War has also been responsible for transforming the film industry into a global force. And despite any current and future sociopolitical challenges that the country and its people may face, Korean cinema is here to stay. 

 

source

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Monday Box Office (May 18) 

 

-Admissions (Total adm)  Daily%  Gross  (weekly%)  [sC]    {wk}   <Title>
 
1.    96,222      (898,224)    -64.4%  $755K        (--)         [756]  {Wk2} <Mad Max: Fury Road>  
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
2.    90,876      (950,766)    -66.4%  $642K        (--)         [721]  {Wk2} <The Chronicles of Evil>  
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
3.    33,591   (10,059,074)  -76.5%  $238K   (-54.9%)     [555]  {Wk5} <The Avengers: Age of Ultron>   
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 
4.    11,501    (1,434,601)   -54.1%  $81K     (-70.9%)     [335]  {Wk4} <Coin Locker Girl>  
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 

5.    3,603        (33,233)      -50.8%  $25K          (--)         [214]  {Wk2} <While we're young> 

---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Total admissions: 258,672
Total Gross: $1,892,353
May Total: $79,544,279

Cumulative gross
The Avengers: Age of Ultron: $79.13 million

The Chronicles of Evil: $7.02 million

Mad Max: Fury Road: $7.36 million

 

Current presales (Midnight)

01. 31.2% (23,903) Mad Max: Fury Road
02. 19.2% (14,693) The Treacherous

03. 13.0%   (9,976) The Chronicles of Evil
04.   9.3%   (7,093) Spy
05.   8.2%   (6,304) The Avengers: Age of Ultron

Edited by Rsyu
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Mad Max 96.2k (-64%)

 

Thats higher than it opening day

 

Signs of good word of mouth. The Chronicles of Evil is down from it's OD. The box office is playing out like many expected it to. 

 

 

Rysu, is it a normal non-holiday monday?

 

It is. Next Monday is a holiday though so numbers should be bumped. 

Edited by Rsyu
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Signs of good word of mouth. The Chronicles of Evil is down from it's OD. The box office is playing out like many expected it to. 

 

 
 

 

It is. Next Monday is a holiday though so numbers should be bumped. 

 

Really awesome number than :lol:

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IM3 on it's 5th week did 40K admissions on monday and 526K admissions from that point onwards. Late legs for Age of Ultron has been worse than IM3 and it shows no sign of improving, so I guess it should finish with around 10.35-10.45M admissions.

 

Avatar's record as the most attended foreign release is looking increasingly unbeatable. 

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IM3 on it's 5th week did 40K admissions on monday and 526K admissions from that point onwards. Late legs for Age of Ultron has been worse than IM3 and it shows no sign of improving, so I guess it should finish with around 10.35-10.45M admissions.

 

Avatar's record as the most attended foreign release is looking increasingly unbeatable. 

 

Frozen was about 10.3 or so? It's really interesting how it, AoU, and Interstellar all had really different runs but ended up in the same ballpark for admissions.

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Frozen was about 10.3 or so? It's really interesting how it, AoU, and Interstellar all had really different runs but ended up in the same ballpark for admissions.

Yeah I was just thinking the same thing, all 3 basically scraped through 10 million admissions. Age of Ultron looked like it would blast past it at one point but word of mouth really didn't hold. But it's still great that we had 3 foreign releases hit 10 million admissions in the space of just 17 months after a 5 year wait (since Avatar). I really can't imagine what the next foreign release to hit 10M admissions will be though. It could be a long while.

Edited by Rsyu
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Yeah I was just thinking the same thing, all 3 basically scraped through 10 million admissions. Age of Ultron looked like it would blast past it at one point but word of mouth really didn't hold for it. But it's still great that we have 3 foreign releases hit 10 million admissions in the space of just 17 months after a 5 year wait (since Avatar). I really can't imagine what the next foreign release to hit 10M admissions will be though. It could be a long while. 

 

2 of the 3 that passed it though, you couldn't see in advance. So if something does pass 10M soon, it could just be another surprise breakout hit.

Edited by Tower
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